“Marijuana Has Gone Mainstream” Proclaims Congressman Earl Blumenauer

Today marks the annual unofficial holiday celebrated around the world by marijuana smokers: 4/20. Amid festivities, marijuana users in some states face legal backlash for participation in today’s “holiday” despite the fact that as Oregon Democrat congressman Earl Blumenauer has proclaimed, “Marijuana has gone mainstream.”

Blumenauer voiced his support for the “amazing progress” the marijuana legalization movement has made, pleading with the federal government to update its current stance considering legalized marijuana is bringing in nine-figure tax revenue, as reported by Fortune.

Blumenauer’s state of Oregon raked in more than $60 million in state tax revenue from legal pot sales last year. Oregon also opened up the nation’s first marijuana home delivery service this year, and the state’s revenue is expected to grow tremendously. Colorado topped a whopping $200 million dollars in revenue.

However, the problem remains that cannabis is still illegal on the federal level – while legal at various state levels, creating a conflict worthy of the nation’s original debate on state versus federal power. The new administration of President Donald Trump is further complicating the situation with mixed signals from Attorney General Jeff Sessions on how he intends to treat marijuana distributors in the states that have chosen to legalize cannabis.

President Trump expressed partial support for medical legalization in an interview with recently ousted Fox News host Bill O’Reilly.

“In some ways I think it’s good and in other ways it’s bad. I do want to see what the medical effects are. I have to see what the medical effects are and, by the way — medical marijuana, medical? I’m in favor of it a hundred percent. But what you are talking about, perhaps not. It’s causing a lot of problems out there,” Trump said.

In February, Blumenauer was part of a bi-partisan group of lawmakers that created the Congressional Cannabis Caucus, whose goal is to reform federal marijuana policy to enable growth in the legal billion dollar marijuana industry.

Blumenauer was also a leading force behind a series of bills called the “Path to Marijuana Reform,” which includes legislation that would update the federal tax code if passed, fixing an issue faced by many legal businesses that can’t claim deductions for tax credit. Another bill Blumenauer backed under the reform package introduced by Hawaii congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard advocated for the federal decriminalization of marijuana. The bills seeks to remove marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act and regulate the drug like alcohol.

“Our outdated policies on marijuana are having devastating ripple effects on individuals and communities across the country,” Gabbard said.